Iraqi premier demands unity amid calls for demonstrations
Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi has called for unity among all Iraqi factions to preserve military gains on the ground against the Takfiri Daesh terrorist group.
Abadi’s office, in a statement released on Tuesday, announced that the Iraqi army’s achievements, among them the takeover of the strategic western city of Fallujah, must be praised and political parties should rather focus on the campaign against Daesh extremists instead of holding anti-government protests.
He added that the Baghdad government is resolute to fulfill its pledge to enact anti-corruption reforms, stressing that public demands cannot be met through “chaos and vandalism.”
The statement came as prominent Iraqi Shia cleric Muqtada al-Sadr has called for nationwide protests next Friday over the deteriorating security situation and rampant corruption in the country.
In late April, hundreds of outraged protesters broke into the restricted Green Zone of the capital, Baghdad, to demand government reforms amid allegations of corruption.
The protests broke out after lawmakers failed to approve new ministers proposed earlier by the Iraqi prime minister in a number of consecutive parliamentary sessions.
SS